Find below publication and presentation information. Some items may link to digital copies.
Publications
Orth, W., & Yoshida, M. (2023). There is Something Missing in NP and Moving in DP. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory.
Orth, W., & Yoshida, M. (2022). Processing profile for quantifiers in verb phrase ellipsis: Evidence for grammatical economy. Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, 7(1), 5210.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2020). Negative polarity item (NPI) illusion is a quantification phenomenon. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
Presentations
Orth, W., Yoshida, M. (2022). If no quantifier can escape, the PPI is still read quickly. Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing AMLaP Conference. York. Presented Digitally. [Poster.pdf]
Orth, W., Yoshida, M. (2022). NPI and PPI Illusion: A multi-methodological investigation. Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Santa Cruz, CA. Presented Digitally.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M. (2022). Processing Profile of Quantifiers in Verb Phrase Ellipsis: Evidence for Grammatical Economy. Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. Washington D.C. Presented Digitally.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M. (2021). Clashing Constraints: Scope Economy and Scope Parallelism in Verb Phrase Ellipsis. Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing AMLaP Conference. Paris. Presented Digitally.
Duff, J., Sloggett, S., Van Handel, N., Sasaki, K., Rich, S., Orth, W., Anand, P., Brasoveanu, A., & Rysling, A. (2021). A mighty Maze! Revisiting strategic underspecification using the Maze task. California Meetup on Psycholinguistics 4. University of California, Irvine.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M. (2021). PPI Illusion Ignores Binding but is Facilitated by Reactivation. Short talk presented at the 34th CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. University of Pennsylvania. Presented Digitally.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2020). Polarity Illusions are Quantifier Illusions. Poster Presented at the 26th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing AMLaP Conference. Potsdam. [Poster.pdf]
Orth, W. (2020). It isn’t just NPI, is it?. Poster presented at the 33rd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Amherst, MA. [Poster.pdf]
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2020). Tracking the time-course of NPI illusion: Why do only some appear online?. Poster presented at the 33rd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Amherst, MA. [Poster.pdf]
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2020). Illusions of ungrammaticality: Evidence from PPI. Poster presented at the 33rd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Amherst MA. [Poster.pdf]
Sloggett, S., Van Handel, N., Sasaki, K., Duff, J., Rich, S., Orth, W., Anand, P., & Rysling, A. (2020). “Ambiguous” isn’t “underspecified”: Evidence from the Maze task. Poster presented at the 33rd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Amherst, MA. [Poster.pdf]
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2019) NPI illusion as scope processing. Presentation at Chicago Area Sentence Processing Experiments and Research (CASPER). Chicago, IL.
Orth, W., Yoshida, M., & Sloggett, S. (2019). NPI illusions are a problem of quantification. Poster presented at the 32nd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Boulder, CO. [Poster pdf]
Orth, W., Pogue, A., & Kurumada, C. (2017). The role of context and information in the interpretation of scalar adjectives. Poster presented at the 30th Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Boston, MA. [Poster pdf]
Orth, W., Pogue, A., & Kurumada, C. (2017). Contextual factors in child adjective interpretation. Poster presented at the 31st Annual National Conference on Undergraduate Research. Memphis, TN.
Kurumada, C., Plvan-Franke, J., Orth, W., & Grimm, S. (2017). Communicative efficiency in language production and evolution: optional plural marking. Poster presented at the 30th Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing. Boston, MA. [Poster pdf]